The people like drugs Psychedelic drugs were an unexpected theme of the week. Musk praised them. So did Chelsea Handler. Psychedelics were the main topic of discussion on the conference’s final day. You know, after all this time in isolation, a few mushrooms might not be the worst idea.
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News Briefs
Why The U.S. Badly Needs A Summer Holiday (Marker)
It’s the first full week of fall. The air is crisp and, after a long-awaited summer, we’re supposed to be feeling refreshed. But in the U.S. right now, people are absolutely fried. Four million people have quit their jobs for four months running, and labor shortages continue even as federal unemployment benefits dry up. The Solution? I suggest an entire month off in summer. You can check it out in Marker this week.
CNN will no longer publish content on Facebook in Australia (CNN)
Remember all that talk about revoking Section 230? We’re starting to get a taste of what that might look like. In Australia, the courts ruled that media companies could be liable for what users post on their Facebook pages. CNN’s response: Goodbye to Facebook in Australia.
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Troll Farms Reached 140 Million Americans A Month on Facebook Before 2020 Election, Internal Report Shows (MIT Technology Review, via Important, Not Important #248)
According to an internal report, popular pages for Christian and Black American content reaching 140 million users per month were being run by Eastern European troll farms - “75% of whom had never followed any of the pages” but were recommended by Facebook’s content-recommendation system. Facebook has been called out before for burying bad news and evading watchdogs, but when their scale is the entire world and they have the ability to contribute to hate crimes and genocides- there’s just too much at stake to stand idly by. One solution might lie in pre-emptive explainers.
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Further Reading
Facebook’s Effort to Attract Preteens Goes Beyond Instagram Kids, Documents Show (WSJ)
Amazon’s Astro Is a Robot Without a Cause (Wired)
Facebook Grilled by Senators Over Its Effect on Children (New York Times)
YouTube to Remove Videos Containing Vaccine Misinformation (WSJ)
Pitch for Purpose: a startup competition celebrating social entrepreneurs (TCS)
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This week on Big Technology Podcast: Amazon Builds a Robot and Threatens Apple — With Wired's Lauren Goode
This week, Wired senior writer Lauren Goode was on hand as Amazon introduced Astro, a home robot, and a Ring home-monitoring drone. Goode joins Big Technology Podcast to discuss her reaction to the products. And in the second half, stay tuned for a discussion of how Apple and Amazon are on a collision course even though they build products very differently.
You can listen on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Thanks again for reading, and see you next Thursday!